Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A man has been jailed for nine years after admitting fatally stabbing a man. Neil Woodley, 50, of Blakes Way, Coleford, was sentenced at Bristol Crown Court on Wednesday after admitting the ...
All six defendants are next due at Bristol Crown Court on 8 January 2025. The drugs were seized after an operation which saw multiple addresses searched across the city on Monday. Follow BBC ...
“The crown court caseload is at record levels, those levels are rising and if we don’t do anything about it we’ll soon be in the territory of a caseload backlog of six figures,” she warned.
The site currently occupied by the crown court on the west side of Small Street was originally occupied by a mansion known as "Creswicks", the home of Henry Creswick who was mayor of Bristol from 1660 to 1661. [1] The mansion was acquired by Edward Colston's brother, Thomas, who erected a new house on the site, probably in the early 18th ...
The trial of 41-year-old Darren Osment began on 16 October 2023 at Bristol Crown Court. [19] The trial heard that on a night out in Devon, Osment, a former partner of Holland, had dialed 999 and confessed to the operator that he had murdered Holland and said that he was "handing himself in." [20] [21] When police officers arrived Osment claimed that he "didn't do it, but had it arranged."
The trial of Vincent Tabak started on 4 October 2011 at the Crown Court at Bristol before Mr Justice Field and a jury. [116] His counsel in the trial was William Clegg QC [117] and the prosecutor was Nigel Lickley QC. [1] Tabak pleaded guilty to manslaughter, but denied murder. [118] [119]
Bristol Crown Court heard Mr Moncrieff had stepped into a row between the defendant and another boy in the early hours of May 6 and was invited to “come around the corner” where he was stabbed.
On 19 September 2016, a jury at Bristol Crown Court found him guilty of the murder after two hours of deliberation. [27] [28] On 23 September, Justice John Griffith Williams sentenced Halliwell to life imprisonment with a whole life order for the murder, meaning he would serve his sentence without the possibility of parole. [29] [30]